Foreword - Fred Cordova
Introduction - Maria P P Root
The Tragic Sense of Filipino History - Peter Bacho
Demographic Changes Transforming the Filipino American Community -
Juanita Tamayo Lott
Macro/Micro Dimensions of Filipino Immigration to the United States
- Antonio J A Pido
Colonialism′s Legacy - Nilda Rimonte
The Inferiorizing of the Filipino
Coming Full Circle - Leny Mendoza Strobel
Narratives of Decolonization among Post-1965 Filipino Americans
Contemporary Mixed-Heritage Filipino Americans - Maria P P Root
Fighting Colonized Identities
Filipino American Identity - Linda A Revilla
Transcending the Crisis
Living in the Shadows - Concepcion A Montoya
The Undocumented Immigrant Experience of Filipinos
Mail-Order Brides - Raquel Z Ordoñez
An Emerging Community
Part of the Community - Cynthia C Mejia-Giudici
A Profile of Deaf Filipino Americans in Seattle
The Day the Dancers Stayed - Theodore S Gonzalves
On Filipino Cultural Nights
Pamantasan - Jon Y Okamura and Amefil R Agbayani
Filipino American Higher Education
Images, Roles and Expectations of Filipino Americans by Filipino
Americans - Allan L Bergano and Barbara L Bergano-Kinney
Homeland Memories and Media - Rick Bonus
Filipino Images and Imaginations in America
Deflowering the Sampaguita - M Evelina Galang
Tomboy, Dyke, Lezzie and Bi - Trinity A Ordona et al
Filipina Lesbian and Bisexual Women Speak Out
At the Frontiers of Narrative - Martin F Manalansan IV
The Mapping of Filipino Gay Men′s Lives in the United States
Throwing the Baby Out with the Bathwater - Antonio T Tiongson,
Jr
Situating Young Filipino Mothers and Fathers Beyond the Dominant
Discourse on Adolescent Pregnancy
The Prevalence and Impact of Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs on
Filipino American Communities - Jacqueline T Jamero Berganio,
Leonardo A Tacata Jr and Peter M Jamero
The Family Tree - Emilie Gaborne Dearing
Dicovering Oneself
The Filipino American Young Turks of Seattle - Peter M Jamero
A Unique Experience in the American Sociopolitical Mainstream
Filipino Americans and Ecology - Felix I Rodriguez
New Challenges in the Global Future
Filipino Spirituality - Thelma B Burgonio-Watson
An Immigrant′s Perspective
Maria P. P. Root, Ph.D., born in Manila, Philippines, grew up in
Los Angeles, California. She graduated from the University of
California at Riverside in 1977 with degrees in Psychology and
Sociology. She subsequently attended Claremont University in
Claremont, California receiving her Master’s degree in Cognitive
Psychology in 1979. She completed her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
at the University of Washington in Seattle in 1983 with an emphasis
in minority mental health.
Dr. Root resides in Seattle, Washington where she is an independent
scholar and clinical psychologist. She has been in practice for
over 20 years. Her general practice focuses on adult and adolescent
treatment therapy, which includes working with families and
couples. Dr. Root’s working areas of knowledge are broad with
emphasis on culturally competent practice, life transition issues,
trauma, ethnic and racial identity, workplace stress and
harassment, and disordered eating. In the early 1980s, she
established a group treatment program for bulimia that grew out of
her dissertation work. Subsequently, she trained other
professionals to recognize and treat people with a range of
disordered eating symptoms. She continues to treat people with
eating disorders.
Dr. Root’s practice also includes formal psychological evaluation.
She works as a consultant to several law enforcement departments.
She also works as an expert witness in forensic settings performing
evaluations and offering expert testimony in matters that require
cultural competence and/or knowledge of racism or
ethnocentrism.
Dr. Root is a trainer, educator, and public speaker on the topics
of multiracial families, multiracial identity, cultural competence,
trauma, work place harassment, and disordered eating. She has
provided lectures and training in New Zealand, England, the
Netherlands, Canada, and the United States for major universities,
professional organizations, grassroots community groups, and
student organizations.
Dr. Root’s publications cover the areas of trauma, cultural
assessment, multiracial identity, feminist therapy, and eating
disorders. One of the leading authorities in the field of racial
and ethnic identity, Dr. Root published the first contemporary
volume on mixed race people, Racially Mixed People in America
(1992). Including this book, she has edited two award-winning books
on multiracial people and produced the foundational Bill of Rights
for Racially Mixed People. The U.S. Census referred to these texts
in their deliberations that resulted in an historic ‘check more
than one’ format to the race question for the 2000 census.
Dr. Root is past-President of the Washington State Psychological
Association and the recipient of national and international awards
from professional and community organizations.
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